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Inspired by a true story, Peter Rock’s fifth novel is the spare, haunting tale of a father and daughter attempting to carve out an independent life while pitted against a society decidedly hostile to their eccentric choices. It’s a strange kind of love story, inspiring us to ponder large questions—what it means to be a responsible parent, and whether, in the modern world, the tension between the urge to live a solitary existence of rugged integrity can be reconciled with the implacable demands of civilization.

When the novel opens, Caroline, the precocious 13-year-old narrator whose voice Rock skillfully channels, is living with a stern but obviously loving man we know only as “Father” in a vast nature preserve called Forest Park in Portland, Oregon. They occupy an improvised dwelling, where Caroline learns geometry and chess and combs the pages of an encyclopedia, simultaneously honing her survival skills. She imbibes the lessons taught by her father’s heroes, icons of individualism like Thoreau and Emerson whose epigrams are threaded through the story.

The pair is arrested after a jogger stumbles upon their hideout, and the authorities send them to a horse farm, where he will work while Caroline enters a public school. But it’s clear they’re not meant to exist in what amounts to captivity, and soon Father engineers their escape. They ascend into the wintry wilderness of Oregon’s Cascade Mountains, whose harsh beauty Rock evokes in economical prose, but quickly are overmatched by the conditions they confront. Events soon force Caroline to make her way alone in the world, fortified with only her native common sense and the teachings her father has shared with her.

My Abandonment is a teasingly ambiguous tale that leaves our speculation about Caroline and Father to linger in the air like the smoke from a dying campfire: is their relationship empowering or toxic? Are the true lessons children learn from their parents the ones those parents intend to impart? These questions, and others equally challenging, make this novel a thoughtful one that readers will savor.

Harvey Freedenberg writes from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

Inspired by a true story, Peter Rock’s fifth novel is the spare, haunting tale of a father and daughter attempting to carve out an independent life while pitted against a society decidedly hostile to their eccentric choices. It’s a strange kind of love story, inspiring…

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North, south,/east, west/We run along/and never rest./Where are we going?/Everywhere!/We never stop/until we’re there. Can you guess what I am? The answer is roads! Riddle Road, by Elizabeth Spires, is filled with tantalizing riddles just like this one. The playful poetic pieces in this book will have parents, teachers, and children everywhere laughing and joining in on the fun. And you thought poetry couldn’t be fun! Spires blends descriptive word clues with Erik Blegvad’s colorful illustrations, and the results are entertaining, artful poems that stimulate and entertain children. The pictures add extra flavor to the rhymes, providing hints to help readers solve the riddles.

Do you know what this one could be? We listen to wishes/but have no ears./We’re at home in the dark/without any fears./We’re older than you by millions of years./When you’re gone forever,/we’ll still be here./Near or far,/can you guess what we are? That Ôtwinkle’ in your eye says you know what the answer is stars! Riddle Road specifically targets six- to ten-year-olds, but why should all the fun be saved for the younger kids? Even the most sophisticated teens will be jumping at the chance to get in on the action of solving the mysteries. Any age will love being riddled and rhymed by these poems.

Everyone will love reading this book over and over until each and every riddle has been completely mastered. The poems leave hints to the answers, yet encourage children to uncover the solutions themselves.

Read this book and you’ll discover/that these poems are like no other./It’s fun, creative, and attractive too./You’ll find no better thing to do! (Ages 6-10 ) Amanda Hester is an eighth grade student at Sumner Academy in Gallatin, Tennessee.

North, south,/east, west/We run along/and never rest./Where are we going?/Everywhere!/We never stop/until we're there. Can you guess what I am? The answer is roads! Riddle Road, by Elizabeth Spires, is filled with tantalizing riddles just like this one. The playful poetic pieces in this book…

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In the summer of 1970, Thomas Mann Jr. (no relation to the writer of the same name) finds an infant in a basket on his front porch, with a note that reads: Eddie’s bastard. Though the book begins with an old-fashioned cliche, readers will be pleasantly surprised by the lively novel the first by author William Kowalski that follows. Eddie’s Bastard is the story of the upbringing of that infant, who Mann realizes is his grandson, the son of his son, Eddie, recently killed in Vietnam. He names the child William Amos Mann, or Billy, for short. Billy’s mother is unknown; Doubtless she had her reasons for leaving him, concludes Mann. More importantly, Mann has his own reason for keeping the baby Billy is the last of a small-town dynasty, the Manns of Mannsville, New York. I got stories to tell him, Tom tells Connor, the family doctor. He needs to know everything. Stories are nearly all that’s left now of the Mann clan, their numbers dwindled to two, and their fortune lost in an ill-advised ostrich-farm venture. The elder Mann lives hermit-like, mostly drunk, immersed in family lore. Occasionally the characters’ musings on what it means to be a Mann border on melodrama. However, as Billy grows up and ventures from the lonely house into the community, the novel explores identity in a larger sense how others see us, how we see ourselves, and how those perceptions ultimately affect reality.

When his grandfather breaks a hip, Billy lives with a foster family. There he meets Trevor a long-term ward of the state, whose tough-kid attitude isolates him from everyone. When, at 14, Billy has an affair with a 30-year-old woman on his grocery delivery route, she thanks him for treating her better than her other suitors do. Then there’s Annie Simpson, a smart, pretty girl from an ill-regarded, white trash family, who points out to Billy that though some mock his family’s fall from greatness, reputations are relative. Ê Kowalski often starts out with less-than-original characters and premises, but more often than not, these evolve and take interesting, even surprising twists and turns. Eddie’s Bastard is an ambitious novel, and no doubt future works will reflect William Kowalski’s growing maturity as a writer. ¦ Rosalind S. Fournier is managing editor of Birmingham magazine in Birmingham, Alabama.

In the summer of 1970, Thomas Mann Jr. (no relation to the writer of the same name) finds an infant in a basket on his front porch, with a note that reads: Eddie's bastard. Though the book begins with an old-fashioned cliche, readers will be…
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As author and journalist Shana Alexander notes at the start of this lively and well-researched tribute, elephants have fascinated mankind for centuries. Writers from Aristotle to Cicero to Chaucer to Donne have stopped to scratch their heads and nibble their quills on the subject of these great beasts. Alexander’s own obsession began in the Portland Zoo in the early 1960s. A determined Life reporter, she made four sudden flights from New York to Portland awaiting the arrival of 225-pound Packy, the first elephant born in America since prehistoric times. Playing midwife to an elephant proved fascinating, and she was hooked. Today, Packy is likely the world’s largest Asian elephant, and Alexander is a self-described informed amateur, a word rooted in lover. Doubtless she is not alone in her enthusiasm. Sadly, however, human fascination has not always been a good thing for the elephants. For many years, Alexander argues, elephant abuse at the hands of circus masters was commonplace. Most striking is her account of the systematic execution of dozens of male circus elephants, which were shot, poisoned, stabbed, and even hanged between 1880 and 1925. The killings came in response to periodic hormonal changes, which render bulls extremely violent. The females were given male names, and audiences were none the wiser. In recent years, pioneering scientists have turned their attention to better understanding and protecting these unusual creatures. Alexander presents a litany of intriguing elephant facts and figures: These enormous animals (mature African males sometimes weigh more than 15,000 pounds) are highly intelligent, never clumsy, and unique in their gentleness, tenderness, and affection with one another. Today, scientists are turning to artificial insemination to save both the African and Asian species, which have been decimated by ivory poaching and habitat destruction.

Alexander gives readers a fascinating glimpse behind the scenes at the National Zoo in Washington, D.

C., as Shanthi, a 23-year-old Asian elephant, is artificially inseminated. Unique experiences like this one distinguish the book, but it is the fascinating nature of elephants themselves that will keep readers turning the pages.

Beth Duris works for The Nature Conservancy in Arlington, Virginia.

As author and journalist Shana Alexander notes at the start of this lively and well-researched tribute, elephants have fascinated mankind for centuries. Writers from Aristotle to Cicero to Chaucer to Donne have stopped to scratch their heads and nibble their quills on the subject of…

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Back when at least a few entertainers owned both intelligence and a sense of the fitness of things, Fred Allen, the great wit and radio comedian — in his case, not mutually contradictory terms — wrote his autobiography and titled it Treadmill to Oblivion. It is an inspired title to an inspired book, one of the points of which is that no matter what you do or how well you do it on your path in life, almost inevitably it will lead to being forgotten.
 
The seemingly dour but actually quite prosaic outlook expressed in that title might seem an odd introduction to Helen Fielding’s much-heralded screwball novel, Bridget Jones’s Diary. But I believe it is valid, especially for readers who have not only intelligence and a sense of the fitness of things but also a few years on them — i.e., those of us in the geezer or pre-geezer geologic strata — who might think that a novel, however hilarious, about the romantic entanglements of an unmarried, thirtysomething British woman could hold little interest for them.
 
Wrong. First, if you are a member of the generation that considered living together before marriage "shacking up," you will be much amused, with your treadmill-to-oblivion perspective, by the emotional gyrations of Bridget Jones and her generation, knowing that in a matter of fleeting decades they will amount to naught. This, of course, is an attitude that irritates the hell out of the Bridget Jones generation and is to be encouraged.
 
Besides that, the book is just plain funny. There have been many English diarists over the centuries, from Samuel Pepys to Adrian Mole, and while Bridget may not quite be the equal of Sue Townsend’s 13-and-3/4-year-old Adrian in sharp observation, she certainly rivals Mr. Pepys in personal revelation.
 
The book is told in the form of a diary over the course of one year, chronicling Bridget’s "Singleton" anxiety that she may never find Mr. Right, her doubts that there is such a thing as Mr. Right, and her resentments that she feels she has to be on such a search at all. "I sat, head down," she writes on September 9, "quivering at their inferences of female sell-by dates and life as a game of musical chairs where girls without a chair/man when the music stops/they pass thirty are ‘out.’ Huh. As if."
 
(Bridget’s — or Fielding’s — misuse of "inference" for "implication" in that entry is ironic, in this age when editors with deficient educations churn out books deficient in editing, because Bridget works in publishing and realizes her limitations: "Must work on spelling, though. After all, have degree in English.")
 
Each day’s entry is preceded by a tally of her success, or lack thereof, in the struggle against the vices of smoking, drinking, and calories. On one particularly stressful day she records "cigarettes 40 (but have stopped inhaling in order to smoke more)."
Some of the entries cheat on the diary conceit, in that they seem to have been written moments after the events took place, but that’s no matter. Nearly all of them have to do with men, sex ("shagging," as the Brits put it), jealousies, and her mother’s attempts to force a wealthy lawyer on her. "I don’t know why she didn’t just come out with it and say, ‘Darling, do shag Mark Darcy over the turkey curry, won’t you? He’s very rich.’"
 
And so it goes, from January 1 to December 26, detailing her Singleton’s "fears of dying alone and being found three weeks later half-eaten by an Alsatian" and her resentment/envy of the Smug Marrieds: hurrying to a party, Bridget writes, "Heart was sinking at thought of being late and hung-over, surrounded by ex-career-girl mothers and their Competitive Childrearing."
 
Still, what is worse than not being a Smug Married yourself is the possibility that one of your unmarried friends might become one: "if you are single the last thing you want is your best friend forming a functional relationship with somebody else."
 
What it all boils down to is a ’90s spin on the boy-gets-girl-gets-boy story. With "deep regret, rage and an overwhelming sense of defeat" Bridget learns that "the secret of happiness with men" comes through a variation on an ancient moral: Mother knows best.
 
Fred Allen probably could have told Bridget, though in a nasal-twangy witticism, that eventually this is what would happen. She’s on the treadmill to oblivion.
 
Roger Miller is a freelance writer. He can be reached at roger_miller@bookpage.com

Back when at least a few entertainers owned both intelligence and a sense of the fitness of things, Fred Allen, the great wit and radio comedian -- in his case, not mutually contradictory terms -- wrote his autobiography and titled it Treadmill to Oblivion.…

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YE OLDE CURIOSITY SHOPPE Color me enlightened Editor’s note: Each month we see lots of books. Some of the curious arrivals are featured in this space.

The Tibetan Art Coloring Book: A Joyful Path to Right Brain Enlightenment (Abrams, $14.95, 0810929074) is not, as you might surmise from the title, your average coloring book. No, you won’t find the Little Mermaid or Barney here. What you will find instead are line drawings of Sakyamuni Buddha and The Green Tara (Goddess of Motherly Compassion, in case you didn’t know). J. Jamyang Sing, a master of thangka painting, the traditional art of Tibet, here brings us, in a decidedly Western form, 12 thangka drawings to contemplate and color. He also includes an introduction in which he explains the ancient principles of Tibetan thangka art and the meanings of the symbols and deities that appear within the book. Real thangka paintings are painted with pigments made from semi- precious stones, plants, and other natural substances, but if you don’t have any of those on hand, color pencils will work, too. All you need do then, as Singe suggests, is Allow your natural creative instincts to guide you.

YE OLDE CURIOSITY SHOPPE Color me enlightened Editor's note: Each month we see lots of books. Some of the curious arrivals are featured in this space.

The Tibetan Art Coloring Book: A Joyful Path to Right Brain Enlightenment (Abrams, $14.95, 0810929074) is…

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The concept of a body-mind connection is nothing new. With the recent rise in the use of alternative therapies to treat illness, the public has been swift to recognize this connection. Larry Dossey, one of the first in the scientific community to write about mind-body integration, now shows how this powerful combination can further affect our own personal healing. In his recent book, Reinventing Medicine, he explains the present shift away from how we have viewed medicine in the past and offers a fascinating look at what the future holds for creating wellness in our lives. Dossey identifies what he sees as three recent eras in medicine. He explains how we have gone beyond Era I (the 1860s) in understanding the mechanical or physical healing that takes place in the body. We have also ventured well beyond Era II (1950s), which allowed us to discover that the mind could actually influence the body, for better or worse. Now, Dossey believes that we have entered Era III, a combination of the two previous eras . . . with a twist. The mind-body interaction in Era III is characterized by phenomena such as familiar, unaccountable hunches, prophetic dreams, and bursts of creative energy. Although science has traditionally distrusted these phenomena for lack of evidence, Dossey offers the recent work of scientists at universities such as Harvard, Princeton, and Stanford to add convincing weight to his argument.

A perhaps troubling aspect for those in the scientific field is Dossey’s key concept, which characterizes Era III medicine, the concept of the nonlocal mind. The author believes that there is sufficient evidence to show that the mind operates beyond the body and is not subject to time. To strengthen his claim, he offers impressive studies for nonlocal events, which suggest that there is not only startling interaction between humans, but also between humans and plants, humans and animals, and even humans and inanimate objects. Anyone interested in the mind-body connection, how it influences our well-being, and how we can focus on it to positively affect our health will be interested in this book.

The concept of a body-mind connection is nothing new. With the recent rise in the use of alternative therapies to treat illness, the public has been swift to recognize this connection. Larry Dossey, one of the first in the scientific community to write about mind-body…

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In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex By Nathaniel Philbrick Viking, $24.95 ISBN 0670891576 Viking Penguin Audio, $14.95, 0141802189 So many books these days are like Chinese cooking they’re a great meal, but they don’t stay with you very long. Books that endure tell us about lives we can only dream of. Austen, Dickens, and Twain all lived what they wrote about, and what they lived was radically different from what we know today.

Then there’s Herman Melville. In my humble opinion, Melville’s Moby Dick is the greatest novel ever written. As we learned in English class, Moby Dick is really about man’s struggle against death. Well, of course it is. Moby Dick is about death, but first and foremost it is about whaling. We no longer hunt whales; at least most nations don’t. This shouldn’t preclude readers from enjoying two books that are fascinating explorations into Melville’s world.

The first, In the Heart of the Sea by Nathaniel Philbrick, details the little-known incident that provided Melville with the foundation of his masterpiece. In 1820, the whaling ship Essex, out of Nantucket, was deliberately hit and sunk in the south Pacific by an enraged sperm whale. The ship’s stunned crew of 20 was forced to make their way across 3,000 miles of open ocean to the western coast of South America. It took three months, and along the way they faced death, dehydration, starvation, and ultimately, cannibalism.

Philbrick presents this horrifying tale in a direct, deliberate manner, detailing the culture of the New England whalers, how they fit into the wider world of the early 19th century, and why their fate considering what they had to do to survive was not what we in the 21st century would expect. A sailor as well as an historian, Philbrick’s richly detailed account of this tragedy stands on its own merits as a narrative; the fact that the story is the basis for one of the great novels of literature only adds to its attraction.

So, Melville had a historical basis for the sinking of the Pequod. What about Moby Dick himself? Was there a basis for this fish tale? Surprisingly, the answer is yes. Tim Severin’s forthcoming book, In Search of Moby Dick, explores the existence of a white whale from both an historical and a modern perspective. As Howard Schliemann searched for the gates of Troy by following Homer’s writings, Severin retraces the voyage of the Pequod as well as Melville’s travels through the south Pacific to get to the roots of the story. Was there a white whale? Does one exist today? He finds some surprising answers. Tropical island gods and legends lead to modern-day whale hunters who search for the great beasts much the same as their ancestors; gasoline motors attached to their outrigger canoes are their only modern innovations. Their physical daring is amazing, and their whispered stories will raise goosebumps. The vividness of Severin’s writing as well as his careless disregard for his own safety make In Search of Moby Dick compelling reading. With a major biography of Melville also on the way for summer, this promises to be a banner year for whaling or at least for the examination of it. If you are a fan of true adventure stories, snap up In Search of Moby Dick and In the Heart of the Sea.

James Neal Webb doesn’t go fishing that often, but when he does, he always throws ’em back.

In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex By Nathaniel Philbrick Viking, $24.95 ISBN 0670891576 Viking Penguin Audio, $14.95, 0141802189 So many books these days are like Chinese cooking they're a great meal, but they don't stay with you very long.…

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In his new book, Summer at Little Lava, Charles Fergus follows Thoreau’s advice and gives a clear account of himself: I had come to Little Lava for my own reasons, my own rewards: solitude, birds on the wing, the healing breath of the wind in my face, and the chance to take the days one at a time, the long bright days of the Northern summer. One adjective in that paragraph stands out healing. Few notions have been loaded with more soft-focus, warm-fuzzy blather than the curative virtues of the natural world. Still, although we may be fancy animals, we’re still animals, and we are just as much a part of nature as birds and moss. We haven’t outgrown that kinship; we’ve merely forgotten it. To return to it and embrace it means more to us than we yet understand. Charles Fergus knows this. Shortly before he and his wife and son left for the abandoned Icelandic farm they called Little Lava, his mother was murdered. Then his niece died in the crash of TWA flight 800. Although Summer at Little Lava is by no means a self-help guide, the process of grieving does color its appreciations of nature and life. Ultimately, however, the book is not melancholy but celebratory. Fergus’s quick sketches of the terrain and its inhabitants, especially birds and scattered native humans, are well observed and entertaining. His dominant character is Iceland itself its landscape, people, and its tongue-twisting language (full of words such as Sn¾fellsjškull). Little Lava was without what we like to call the modern conveniences. It forced its inhabitants to face their relationship with the world around them. Early on, Fergus invokes Henry Beston’s masterpiece The Outermost House, a 1920s’ account of many months alone on the shore of Cape Cod. Iceland, to my mind, Fergus writes, was itself an outermost house of the Western world. And the physical house we called Little Lava on the far shore of a tidal lagoon, bound by marsh and mountain and ocean and the vast Icelandic sky seemed to me the quintessential outermost house. Such a reference invites comparison. Fergus lacks both Beston’s offhand lyricism and his perfect pitch. But, thanks to Fergus’s attention to detail, his enthusiasm for Iceland, and his emotional candor, Summer at Little Lava is great fun, an adventure with a charming and knowledgeable companion. Michael Sims is the author of Darwin’s Orchestra (Henry Holt).

In his new book, Summer at Little Lava, Charles Fergus follows Thoreau's advice and gives a clear account of himself: I had come to Little Lava for my own reasons, my own rewards: solitude, birds on the wing, the healing breath of the wind in…

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There are heroes and rabble-rousers, news mongers and martyrs, media moguls, photographers, and sleuths in this captivating new book, Crusaders, Scoundrels, Journalists. In all, it’s a rogue’s gallery of purveyors of the day’s news a collection of personalities and characters of current and past centuries.

Of course, identifying a journalist these days is no simple matter.

There’s no argument that Eddie Adams, an Associated Press photographer sent to Vietnam in the 1960s, is a journalist. Adams immortalized the horror of war with his Newsweek photograph of a Saigon execution. We know Walter Cronkite fits the bill, as did 1950s television reporter Edward R. Murrow.

But what about Jerry Springer, the talk show host whose shows are synonymous with tabloid television brawls? Humorist Erma Bombeck? Or literary giant Edgar Allan Poe? These people, too, fall within the editor’s definition of crusaders, scoundrels, and journalists. Has journalism progressed over the centuries? It depends on your point of view. News is more accurate, fair, and responsible today than before, claims Tim Russert in the book’s foreword. But he notes, too, that the digital age brings us more inaccuracy, bias, and sensationalism.

Joe Urschel, executive director of Newseum, notes in the introduction that each of the several hundred individuals profiled in the book shaped how the news was reported in their day. Even gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson made his mark with his dismissal of objectivity: With the possible exception of things like box scores, race results and stock market tabulations, there is no such thing as objective journalism, he once wrote.

Question is, should we take Thompson’s word as gospel? And who qualifies as a newsperson, anyway? In a sense, we are all newspeople from time to time as Crusaders demonstrates.

Loretta Kalb is a business journalist. She writes personal finance and banking news for The Sacramento Bee.

There are heroes and rabble-rousers, news mongers and martyrs, media moguls, photographers, and sleuths in this captivating new book, Crusaders, Scoundrels, Journalists. In all, it's a rogue's gallery of purveyors of the day's news a collection of personalities and characters of current and past centuries.

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Lord Acton first noted that power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Brenda Clough takes a much more optimistic view of human nature in her novel The Doors of Death and Life. Her heroes, Rob Lewis and Edwin Barbarossa, hold powers unequaled in human history. Lewis can sense the emotions and thoughts of others, while Barbarossa has the gift of immortality. Despite these awesome powers, the men have chosen to live in anonymity until an accident reveals Barbarossa’s immortality.

Even after their powers come to light and put them in peril, Lewis is concerned about using his extra-sensory ability for fear that it will set him apart from the human race. Lewis eventually comes up against a man who lacks his powers, but has very specific ideas about how such powers should be used; the demarcation between human and superhuman becomes quite important, and Clough resolves the issue in a surprising and satisfying manner.

Clough’s characters are fully realized, despite their comic book superpowers. Lewis’s 14-year marriage must face the strains of his wife’s discovery that he has strange powers. Barbarossa’s more recent marriage has the strain of separation, in addition to the knowledge that he will long out-live his wife. Clough deals with these, and other domestic issues, in a serious and introspective manner.

All of Clough’s characters have faults, but theirs are the faults of normal men and women rather than the hubris of the exceptionally gifted. Aside from their amazing powers, Lewis and Barbarossa could easily be next-door neighbors whose lives hit the usual occasional difficulty. This allows the reader to relate to them and come to care about their rather unique problems.

The Doors of Death and Life demonstrates that good science fiction can be philosophical while still providing moments of drama. The characters deal equally with life and death situations and moral dilemmas. Anyone who thinks that science fiction only refers to that Buck Rogers stuff would be pleasantly surprised to discover Brenda Clough’s writing. ¦ Steven Silver is a freelance writer from Northbrook, Illinois, who will appear June 13 as contestant on Jeopardy!

Lord Acton first noted that power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Brenda Clough takes a much more optimistic view of human nature in her novel The Doors of Death and Life. Her heroes, Rob Lewis and Edwin Barbarossa, hold powers unequaled in…
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Detective Sergeant Romulus Poe, part Paiute Indian and part Mormon, is the lead character in the first in a new series by Los Angeles author Faye Kellerman, known best for her Peter Decker/Rina Lazarus mysteries. Set in Las Vegas, Moon Music is a tour of the desert city as much more than the grown-up playground of today. Decker is the lead investigator in a series of grisly show girl murders. His primary love interest and investigative partner is Hindu pathologist Dr. Rukmani Kalil who, along with Poe’s twin brother Remus, slightly batty Mother, Emma, and high school sweetheart, Alison Jensen, allow Kellerman to introduce themes of mysticism and fantasy along with her respect for religion as a motivating and moderating force in human dynamics.

In an eerie prescience, the plot of Moon Music is entwined with Nevada’s infamous Yucca Flat atomic test site. Emma Poe reminisces about her senior class trip to see the mushroom cloud, They took us there very early in the morning . . . before dawn. It was dark and cold and a little spooky. We had to hunker down in these troughs that the soldiers had dug a couple of years before. We were just these kids, giggling and telling scary things because we were nervous. But we were excited too. . . . Ten! Nine! Eight, seven, six . . . even with my eyes closed and covered with my arms, I still saw this . . . this fantastic burst of light shooting through my skin . . . like God was recreating the universe. And then . . . at the same time . . . you felt this big blast of heat . . . sizzling through your clothes. And when they said you could look up, you did. And there it was. Right there in the sky . . . that famous mushroom cloud . . . what a thrill! Indeed. What a thrill. Not every character in the book is enchanted with the nuclear age, We explode something like a thousand bombs into our atmosphere after exploding only two bombs in enemy territory. Now you tell me. Who came out better, huh? Meticulous documentation of the early detonations at the Nevada Proving Ground are a stark reminder of the days of public innocence the days when support for the atomic program was considered a certain patriotic duty, On January 27, 1951 a one-kiloton bomb named Able was dropped above Frenchman Flat . . . More bombs followed, each one christened as if the government were birthing an infant . . . from Able in 1951 to . . . Little Feller I in July of 1962. Faye Kellerman’s talent for deeply complex characters, riveting action, and thorough research keeps us sitting on the edge of our seat, wide awake late at night. Moon Music is an energizing, terrifying, thought provoking introduction to the Las Vegas of Romulus Poe and Rukmani Kalil. You’ll want to go back often and stay late.

Donna Headrick is a researcher and a columnist for the IntrepidNetReporter.

Detective Sergeant Romulus Poe, part Paiute Indian and part Mormon, is the lead character in the first in a new series by Los Angeles author Faye Kellerman, known best for her Peter Decker/Rina Lazarus mysteries. Set in Las Vegas, Moon Music is a tour of…

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More Matter: Essays and Criticism By John Updike Alfred A. Knopf, $35 ISBN 0375406301 Review by Roger Bishop John Updike is one of our most respected and honored, as well as prolific, novelists and short story writers. He also has published several volumes of poetry. But, he says, I set out to be a magazine writer, a wordsmith as the profession was understood in the industrial first half of the century, and I like seeing my name in what they used to call Ôhard type.’ He fell in love with the New Yorker when he was a child and, for over 40 years, has been a frequent contributor. Appearing under the same Rea Irvin-designed title-type and department logos as White and Thurber and Cheever and those magical cartoons was for me a dream come true. It still is. Though he has also written for other publications, most of Updike’s nonfiction has appeared in that magazine. Every eight years or so he gathers together his periodical pieces and other occasional writings and publishes them in a book. The fifth collection, More Matter: Essays and Criticism, is, like the earlier ones, a diverse cornucopia of riches. In this, his 50th book, Updike’s wide-ranging, intellectual curiosity matched with his lucid and graceful prose make a potent combination. (An earlier such collection, Hugging the Shore, received the National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism.) A few of the many subjects discussed are: New York as reflected in American writing since 1920; the adventure of installing a burglar alarm; haircuts of different kinds (a piece that attracted more mail than any magazine writing he has ever published); the lives of Isaac Newton, Helen Keller, and Abraham Lincoln; Mickey Mouse; the art of Roy Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol; and appreciations of three New Yorker stalwarts who were paternally kind to me : William Shawn, Brendan Gill, and William Maxwell.

Of particular interest are Updike’s observations on writers and writing. He notes the competitive nature of the literary life, where writers eye each other with a vigorous jealousy and suspicion. They are swift to condemn and dismiss, as a means of keeping the field from getting too crowded. It does not surprise us, then, when he says: A writer, I have found, takes less comfort in being praised than in a colleague’s being panned. In reviewing a biography of Graham Greene, he generalizes: The trouble with literary biographies, perhaps, is that they mainly testify to the long worldly corruption of a life, as documented deeds and days and disappointments pile up, and cannot convey the unearthly human innocence that attends, in the perpetual present tense of living, the self that seems the real one. Whether the literary work under consideration is by a contemporary U.

S. or a European or South American author, or an author who wrote decades ago, Updike’s criticism is often astute and compelling. He wears his learning lightly, but he is familiar with the author’s other writings and her or his life. Although often generous with his praise, Updike can offer devastating criticism. Writing about a late work of Edith Wharton: Comedy is, perhaps, a natural mode for aged authors. The momentousness of being alive the majestic awfulness is felt most keenly by the young, and human existence comes to seem, as death nears and perspective lengthens, gossamer-light, such stuff as dreams are made on. On Edmund Wilson’s journals: The journals are not quite literature, yet they have an unpreening frankness and an energetic curiosity that stimulates our appetite for literature. Ê ÊAgain showing keen insight into the work of American writers, Updike says, . . . Faulkner, at his most eccentric and willfully windy, thought he knew what he was doing. Dreiser will never be, so muddied is his prose at the source, a model of stylistic integrity. John Updike is indeed a thoughtful wordsmith, a literary craftsman worthy to walk in the footsteps of those illustrious New Yorker writers he admired from afar many years ago. ¦ Roger Bishop is a regular contributor to BookPage.

More Matter: Essays and Criticism By John Updike Alfred A. Knopf, $35 ISBN 0375406301 Review by Roger Bishop John Updike is one of our most respected and honored, as well as prolific, novelists and short story writers. He also has published several volumes of poetry.…

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